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قدمت الدعوة لعدد من المحاضرين والمهتمين بموضوع
الحلقة، إما بالحضور الفعلي أو نقل مشاركته عبر تقنية
البث الفضائي المباشر، وفيما يلي قائمة بأسمائهم:
1. د. ابراهيم بن عبد الله المحيسن : رؤية مستقبلية
للتعاون في صناعة التعلم الإلكتروني بين مؤسسات
التعليم الجامعي بالمملكة
2. د. منصوربن علي الشهري: إطار مقترح لاتحاد جامعات
المملكة افتراضيا.ً
3. نافين مالك Naveen A Malik مدير الجامعة الافتراضية
الباكستانية .
4. كولين لاتشيم Colin Latchem مستشار وكاتب بخبرة تزيد عن 30 عاماً في مجال تقنيات التعليم والتعلم الإلكتروني.
5. جاجاراج ضاناراجان Gajaraj Dhanarajan المدير
السابق لاتحاد الكومونولث التعليمي .
6. ستيفن هاببلستيفن مولينكس Stephen Molyneux خبير ومستشار متميز في مجال تطويع التقنية في التعليم والتدريب.
Naveed A. Malik
Naveed A. Malik, Sc.D. is
currently the Rector of the Virtual University of
Pakistan. Dr. Malik obtained his Master’s degree in
Physics from the University of the Punjab, Pakistan
and later the Doctor of Science degree from M.I.T.
in the field of Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science.
As a staff member at the University of the Punjab,
Pakistan’s largest and oldest university, Dr. Malik
established the Spark Source Mass Spectroscopy
laboratory at the Centre for Solid State Physics and
later, became the founder chairman of the Department
of Computer Science. He has been associated with the
Virtual University project from inception to launch.
He is a life member of the Pakistan Institute of
Physics.
Gajaraj Dhanarajan
Joined Commonwealth
of Learning (COL) as its second President on 1
September 1995. On retirement from COL, an
intergovernmental development agency, based in
Vancouver, British Columbia, joined the Wawasan
Education Foundation, a Malaysian charity promoting
access to learning for all.
Involved in distance education and open learning for
over 25 years. Participated in establishing a number
of distance education systems in South and Southeast
Asia and, between 1982 and 1985, organised a
successful network of distance education research in
Asia with support from Canada's International
Development Research Centre (IDRC).
Joined the newly established Open Learning Institute
of Hong Kong (now the Open University of Hong Kong)
in 1989 as Associate Director (Academic), and served
as director from 1991 - 1995. Honoured in 1992 by
the institute with the title of Professor, and then
Professor Emeritus in 1995.
Secretary General of the Asian Association of Open
Universities, a member of the Executive Board of the
International Council for Distance Education (ICDE),
educational advisor to the International Union for
the Conservation of Nature and has served on several
international consultancy bodies.
Received numerous honorary degrees and prestigious
awards from Asian and European universities
and institutions.
Colin Latchem
Colin Latchem has over thirty years' experience of leading and managing educational technology and educational change. In the 1970s, he was a pioneer in the UK in educational television and learning resources and he established the Learning Resources Unit at Stanmillis College of Education (now part of Queen's University) Belfast, and was a consultant to the UK National Council of Educational Technology.
In Australia, where he now lives and works, he held a professorial position as the Head of the Teaching Learning Group at Curtin University of Technology,Perth Western Australia until 1998. In this role, he was responsible for academic staff development, open and distance education and educational technology. He also served on the Academic Programs Board of the Open Learning Australia consortium, was national president of the Open and Distance Learning Association of Australia (ODLAA) and undertook major consultancies into, eg., the University of the South Pacific; satellite USPNet, the Tanami Network, a videoconferencing network for aboriginal communities in the Australian outback, and the Western Australian Telecentre Network. He has written books on multimedia, staff development for open learning, leadership for 21st century learning, telecentres and teacher education through open and distance education. The book on leadership received the 2002 Charles Wedemyer Award for the best book of the year on distance education in the US.
Colin is now a consultant and writer. He works mainly in Australia and the Asia-Pacific although he has also spent a year working in the Caribbean on a Commonwealth Fund for Technical Cooperation consultancy.
Stephen Molyneux
Steve Molyneux, (born Walton, Liverpool, 24 February 1955) is one of the leading experts in the use of Information and Communication technology to support Education and Training in the UK. He is an outspoken advocate, but also challenges current Government and Industry thinking on how such technologies should be deployed. Whilst an early pioneer in the development of Virtual Learning Environments, he now believes that the way society interacts with technology and the Web must lead us to transform education systems from the late 20th century 'pull' model of e-learning to a newer 'push' model based on personalisation.
In 1999 he founded, together with Microsoft and ICL, Learning Lab, a not-for profit membership-led organisation, supporting all those involved in the Development, Delivery and Implementation of Learning Technologies in the UK.
Internationally, Molyneux has contributed to the use of technology to support education and training in a number of Countries including the United States, Germany and Singapore. He works closely with the United States Department of Labor and the Department of Defense on training technology strategies.
Molyneux is often asked to provide advice on the strategic use of ICT and Broadband Infrastructure to National, European and International Clients from both the Public and Private sector and performs numerous speaking engagements.
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